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Mining Geologist's Service to the Mineral IndustryBy Reno H. Sales
Since leaving school my efforts have been geared to the task of making geology useful to the mining industry. The responsibility of the economic geologist or mining geologist of today has grown to be
Jan 1, 1942
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Tomorrow's MetalsBy Pual M. Tyler
BLIZKRIEG tactics in the present war have consumed metals on such a profligate scale that some of the best-laid procurement plans for civilian and military needs of even a year ago seem in retrospect
Jan 1, 1942
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Mining Geologist's Service to the Mineral IndustryBy Sales, Reno
Since leaving school my efforts have been geared to the task of making geology useful to the mining industry. The responsibility of the economic geologist or mining geologist of today has grown to be
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7193 The Various B. t. u. Values of a CoalBy L. R. Burdick, J. F. Barkley
The inherent heating value or the amount of heat that will be produced when a coal is completely burned is measured in British thermal units (B. t. u.) per pound of coal . This standard heat unit is t
Dec 1, 1941
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RI 3575 Experiments On Strength Of Small Pillars Of Coal In The Pittsburgh BedBy H. P. Greenwald, Irving Hartman, H. C. Howarth
"INTRODUCTION A report of tests of seven small pillars formed from the Pittsburgh coal bed in the Experimental coal mine was given in Technical Paper 605 5/ Five additional pillars were tested between
Jun 1, 1941
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RI 3572 Constancy Of B.T.U. Value Of Pure Coal (4a6c2dc5-0d80-4925-a512-c67a2db2f475)By L. R. Burdick, J. F. Barkley
"There is a general conceit in the coal trade that the moisture- and ash-free B.t.u. of coal from the same seam, and surely from the same mine,is substantially a constant; that calculation of the mois
Jun 1, 1941
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IC 7175 Water Problem in the Pennsylvania Anthracite Mining RegionBy S. H. Ash
The Pennsylvania anthracite-mining region is the only one in the world of major magnitude. As the deposits of anthracite in the United States are limited virt113.lly to Pennsylvania, the difficulties
May 1, 1941
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Papers - Engineering Research - Some Theoretical Considerations on the Problem of Well Shooting (T.P. 1268, with discussion)By H. H. Evinger, M. Muskat
Although the shooting of oil wells for the purpose of increasing production has been practiced since 1866, present-day shooting technique has been arrived at almost wholly by a process of trial and er
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Kentucky during 1940By Coleman D. Hunter, George M. Straughan
Oil and gas development as well as extensive leasing in Kentucky during 1940 has shown a marked improvement over the past three years.$ The most noticeable improvement is the gas development in easter
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Production Engineering - Temperature Surveys in Oil Wells (T.P. 1258, with discussion)By C. V. Millikan
Temperature measurement in wells is an old practice and geothermal gradients have been of interest to geologists for many years.le2 Their application to the operation of oil wells is a more recent pra
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Flow of Solid Metals from the Standpoint of the Chemical-rate Theory (T.P. 1301, with discussion)By Walter Kauzmann
All viscous or plastic flow of incompressible matter is the result of shear strain; the changing shape of any body that is being plastically deformed can be completely described in terms of the shear
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Coalesced Copper-Its History, I'roduction and Characteristics (T.P. 1238, with discussion)By H. H. Stout
In the early fall of 1925, the writer was conducting, in the Ledoux and Co. laboratory, New York, experiments directed toward ascertaining the effect on its impurity content when cathode copper was su
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Some Observations in Ore Search – Symposium (T.P. 1209)Question 1—1s Structural Deformation of Some Character Always Necessary for the Migration of Mineralizing Solutions. Especially in Limestone or Other Dense Rocks Discussion by: A. M. Bateman....
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Newly Recognized Features of Mineral Paragenesis at Leadville, Colorado (T.P. 1105)By Edward P. Chapman
In the Leadville district toward the close of the "intermediate mesothermal period" of mineralization, there occurred a stage of ore deposition marked by a rather complex mineral association. As bismu
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Geological, Chemical and Physical Problems in the Marble Industry (T.P. 1261)By George W. Bain
Some problems concomitant with commercial exploitalion of marble are presented as examples of interesting, useful and profitable fields for application of scientific knowledge. The marble industry is
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in South Texas during 1940By Michel T. Halbouty
The area for which oil and gas developments in South Texas are reported for 1940 in this paper covers the same counties that were included in the reports for 1938 and 1939, with the addition of LaSall
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - The Environment of Ore Bodies (discussion)R,. P. JaRvis,* El Oro, Estado de México, México.—The practical problem raised by Mr. Wisser—that is, the determination of the lower limit of ore deposition, below which it is useless to look for ore
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Some Complexities of Impact Strength (T.P. 1341, Howe Lecture)By Alfred V. de Forest
We are now assembled in this hall for the eighteenth lecture in honor of the memory of our greatest American metallurgist, Henry Marion Howe. Many of his most intimate contemporaries, led, as was fitt
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Study of Modern Bessemer Steels (T.P. 1346, with discussion)By L. D. Woodworth, E. E. McGinley
During the past several years has occurred what, in the light of future events, may aptly be called the rebirth of the acid Bessemer process. The increased attention given to the technical and metallu
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Effect of Composition and Steelmaking Practice on Graphitization below the A1 of Eighteen One Per Cent Plain Carbon Steels (T.P. 1228)By Maurice C. Fetzer, Charles R. Austin
It has long been known that plain high-carbon steels may be susceptible to graphiti-zation below the A1 critical, but no data have been available to indicate what factors cause and tend to inhibit gra
Jan 1, 1941